diabetic eye disease - auckland · lenticular induced myopic shift! • ... • pre-proliferative/...

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Diabetic Eye Disease

Dr Stuti Misra, PhD, BOptomDepartment of OphthalmologyUniversity of Aucklands.misra@auckland.ac.nz

Organs affected

• Large blood vessel disease Heart Nervous system Peripheral vascular disease

• Small blood vessel disease Eyes Kidneys Nervous system

Ocular surface: Tear film and Cornea

• Tear film - Dry eye Reduced tear quantity Reduced tear film stability

• Reduced corneal sensitivity

• Greater risk of viraland fungal infections

Cornea

• Corneal nerve damage

• Keratopathy

Superficial punctate keratitis

Recurrent corneal erosions

Persistent epithelial defects

Iris, Pupil and Crystalline lens

• Miotic Pupil

• Iris neovascularisation

• Lenticular induced myopic shift!

• Cataract (post-subcapsular)

Retina

Diabetic retinopathy

Retina

• Two main retinal diseases in older patients Diabetic retinopathy Age related macular degeneration

Retina

Diabetic retinopathy Accounts for >90% blindness under

the age of 60

Age related macular degeneration Accounts for >90% blindness over

the age of 60

Key differential in retinal macular haemorrhages

• Principally, either diabetic maculopathy* or age related macular degeneration

• Less commonly branch retinal vein occlusion*

• Differentiate can be tricky: Age ARMD > 60 years Age DR < 60 years Diabetic maculopathy* by itself is uncommon

• Look for retinopathy beyond macula*

Clinical features

Red bits (small and or large)• Blood: microaneurysms, haemorrhages

White/yellow bits• Cotton wool spots, drusen & exudate

Brown/black bits• Laser, pigment

Normal

Red Bits: small

Red bits: larger

Red Bits: Large

Red Bits: Large

And Yellow bits

Red Bits: Large

And Yellow bits

Yellow bits= exudate

Red Bits: Large

And Yellow bits

And brown/black bits

More than one vessel involved

All the retinal signs accounted for !!

• Blocked vessels lead to • Retinal haemorrhages• Cotton wool spots• Abnormal retinal vessels

• Venous “sausaging”, irregularity

• Intra-retinal microvascular anomalies

• Disc new vessels• Retinal new vessels

All the retinal signs accounted for !!

• Leaking vessels lead to • Protein (hard exudate)• Haemorrhage• Fluid (diffuse and local)

• Intra-retinal and Sub-retinal

Fluid

Exudate

*OCT scan showing fluid (oedema)

Optical Coherence Tomography

Fluid

Exudate

Diabetic retinopathy (DR)

• How do we classify it

• Background: bits and bobs but good vision!

• Pre-proliferative/ Proliferative: Ischaemic sign of varying degree leading to “new vessel growth”

• Maculopathy: involvement of the macula

Classification of retinopathyvessel blockage

No retinopathy

Proliferative

Non -proliferative

Background

Increasing Ischaemia

Classification of retinopathyvessel leakage

No leakage

Leakage

Focal Diffuse

Ischaemic

Non-proliferative Signs

• Microaneurysms• Intraretinal haemorrhages• Hard/Soft exudates

Venous changes

Proliferative retinopathy

• Neovascularisation

Intra-retinal microvascular abnormalities (IRMA)

Diabetic Macular oedema

Classification of maculopathyvessel leakage/blockage

Maculopathy

FocalFocal area of leak

DiffuseGeneral leak

IschaemicLoss of blood supply

Maculopathy• Focal Fluid, lipid and proteins leak from a focal group of

microaneurysm often leaving a well defined yellow ring – ring or circinate exudate

• Ischaemic Capillaries underlying the fovea are all occluded

• Diffuse All the capillaries leak

Maculopathy

Normal vasculature

Fluorescein angiogram

Ischaemic maculopathy

Why are we interested?

• Retinopathy present in 1/3rd of diabetics

• About 4-8% have retinopathy at diagnosis

• Leading cause of blindness in working age-group

• Prompt recognition and treatment of sight-

threatening eye disease can prevent sight-loss

Screening Programs in NZ

Diabetic retinal screening, grading, monitoring and referral guidance. MOH, 2016

Treatment of retinopathy

• Historically no treatment• “diabetics died” before chronic complications

developed• Historically poor systemic treatment

• Laser protocols for blockage e.g. pan retinal photocoagulation

• Laser protocols for leakage e.g. focal laser • Bevacizumab (Avastin)

Help reducing macular oedema and neovascularisation

General management

• Education and support• Institute good diabetic

control• Lifestyle changes

Weight loss Dietary modification Exercise Cessation of smoking

• Carbohydrate control Diet Oral hypoglycemics Insulin

• Control BP & Lipids• Monitor renal function• Management of the

complications of diabetes

Programmes “Get Checked” . Budget 2006 $76m for obesity. CM “Lets Beat Diabetes”

Risk of retinopathy

• Age• Duration of DM• Glycaemic control• Hypertension• Lipid status• Anaemia

• Pregnancy• Obesity• Smoking• Alcohol use• Other Systemic

disease• Ethnicity

Questions....

All material contained in this presentation is copyright of The University of Auckland, Department of Ophthalmology and

should not be reproduced without written permission

The End

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